20 April 2011

Everyone knows that the excess growth in health care costs is driving the fiscal crisis in our country. The problem is that while everybody wants to somehow cut the cost of Medicare/Medicaid, in theory, when it comes time to actually make cuts, the courage of our politicians fails in the face of unrelenting public opposition to cuts in Medicare. In a poll just this week, the WaPo found that a staggering 78% of respondents opposed cuts to Medicare, 65% strongly. Surprisingly, despite the fact that it's a "welfare" program with limited constituency, 69% opposed cuts in Medicaid. And this is despite the fact that the poll question was slightly loaded, phrased to trigger the respondents' awareness of the national debt. Gallup found that even of Republicans, only 14% favored an overhaul of these popular entitlement programs, and 61% favored either no change or minor changes.

This is disheartening, especially in light of the fact that the critics of ObamaCare are those who often complain that it does to little to contain costs. Yet they are trying to repeal what is probably the single most effective cost-control provision in the health care reform. Apparently it's "rationing" or possibly a "death panel."

I should explain what the IPAB is, before I go any further. Established in the PPACA, it grew out of the MedPAC, Medicare Payment Advisory Commission. MedPAC made recommendations to Congress regarding what services Medicare should pay for, and how much it should pay. However, Congress often (read: usually) ignored those recommendations, especially for medical devices or other services with well-connected lobbyists, and MedPAC has been a very weak influence on controlling the growth in Medicare expenditures. IPAB is a bit different. It will consist of 15 appointed members who are to be experts in health care, economics, research and insurance. Some, but no more than half, are to be health care providers. The president is to consult with Congressional leaders before appointing them, and the chair will have to face Senate confirmation.

The IPAB will have powers more expansive than MedPAC. If HHS determines that the growth of medicare is expected to exceed a certain index (inflation-based till 2020, GDP-based after that), the IPAB is required to submit a plan which would restrict that growth by a certain percent.

IPAB is explicitly prohibited from making any recommendation that would ration care, raise out-of-pocket expenses from beneficiaries, or restrict eligibility in Medicare. It also cannot reduce hospital reimbursement rates till 2020. Any recommendation IPAB makes will become law (or, technically, a rule) unless Congress acts to replace that recommendation with one which can save as much money. Congress may, with 60 votes in the Senate, choose to block the IPAB recommendations altogether. (Interestingly, 60 votes are also required to repeal or disband IPAB.)

This body was created basically because Congress failed to act, and shows every likelihood of continuing that gridlock on the hot-button item of health care cost control. And when Congress has in the past tried to put health care cost controls into law, it hasn't worked out so well. (See: SGR) So the PPACA took the initiative away from Congress and creates a dynamic in which health care experts, including doctors, will be making recommendations that will automatically go into effect. This takes the "default" mode from "nothing happens" to policy changes which will happen unless Congress can rouse itself to block them. Is that a possibility? Sure! (See again: SGR) Will it happen routinely, if the rules proposed are limited in scope and well-targeted? Hard to say. We won't know that until IPAB is actually constituted and has made some recommendations. There are as yet no appointees.

The advantage of this is that it takes policy and puts it into the hands of actual health-care experts, including doctors and nurses, patient advocates, and other industry experts, instead of our venal and corrupt politicians. The disadvantage of this is that it takes policy and puts it into the hands of unaccountable bureaucrats instead of our democratically-elected representatives. In the end, I think this is a good thing. Something need to change. Costs need to be controlled. Congress does not seem able to manage this problem. Peter Orszag described the IPAB as "the largest yielding of sovereignty from the Congress since the creation of the Federal Reserve." That was in praise of the IPAB, by the way.

So why is the IPAB being opposed in Congress now? I think there are a variety of reasons. Some legislators may be regretting the cessation of that power to an outside agency. The GOP has a vested interest in opposing everything about ObamaCare, both ideologically and electorally. And Republicans have never been comfortable with bureaucrat-run, centralized decision-making bodied in the first place. There are electoral advantages to members of both parties in posing as defenders of Medicare. Some of both parties may be influenced by the financial support of the health care industry. (Industry sources have a vested interest in health care costs not being controlled -- remember that one man's waste and abuse is another's paycheck.)

In the end, I think Congress will leave the IPAB alone, and they'll be glad they did. When the time comes for the cuts we all know are needed, IPAB can do the hard work and the politicians won't have to get any blood on their hands. They can decry the cuts as misguided and lament their inability to block them. Everybody gets to evade responsibility, and the policy can actually be set by experts. Whether they will get it right, or whether they will have the scope of authority to bend the curve of health care costs is at this point still an unknown. But changes are needed, and at this time the IPAB is the only credible mechanism we have in place or under consideration.

4 comments:

Also, Dr. Meat, can you refer me to a post (or create one!) that explains how the new healthcare law will affect doctors (specifically) in the future? And if, as I suspect, the future is nebulous, can you give us your best guess on this topic? If all goes well this summer, I'm hoping to graduate med school in 2016. Is the future bright?

AxlRose, you have if you want to really know what Obamacare is going to look like, look no further than the British NHS, which is a disaster. If you want to have an idea of what IPAB will be, look at the British National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), and see the "brilliant" decisions that it made including disallowing Herceptin for the treatment of breast cancer solely due to its cost. Shadowfax's wife would have been relegated to inferior medications had she lived in England. In fairness, NICE did eventually come to its senses. Speaking of senses, you better start reading something other than a socialist leaning blog if you want to get a fair and balanced perspective on medicine and healthcare reform. As a physician for 8 years now, I have already started looking at nonclinical careers with the looming Obamacare monster coming in 2014. It is going to really suck to be a physician in the USA.

Medicare ultimately needs to go away forever. But in the meantime there are cost controls that can be enacted that will temporarily allow it to function until it is fazed out. First, allow all insurance companies to nationalize. When more patients are captured, costs will go down for everyone. Get rid of the Medicare Advantage plans. Nationalizing the private insurance industry will allow them to absorb the loss of this money. Allow the gov't to negotiate drug prices with the pharmaceutical companies - something that was lost in the Medicare prescription bill passed under the Bush Jr administration. The gov't is the single largest customer for these companies. Savings would be enormous just with this alone. Notice that I never mentioned rationing.

Believe me, there are plenty of people out there who want to reform medicare, unfortunately, none of them have a "D" after their name.

Shadowfax

About me: I am an ER physician and administrator living in the Pacific Northwest. I live with my wife and four kids. Various other interests include Shorin-ryu karate, general aviation, Irish music, Apple computers, and progressive politics. My kids do their best to ensure that I have little time to pursue these hobbies.

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